This invention relates generally to communications and, more particularly, to wireless systems.
Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK) is a popular modulation scheme wherein information bits are encoded as +1 or −1. For channels where the main source of signal distortion is through additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN), the optimal (in terms of minimum error probability) operations to be performed at the receiver are well known. However, in a typical wireless channel, such a transmitted signal undergoes distortion due to fading and path loss in addition to additive noise and interference.
Such fading channels are characterized not only by rapid amplitude and phase variations but also time and/or frequency dispersion. This poses a problem in the demodulation of phase or frequency modulated signals. The fading channel causes rapid changes in the phase thus making it very difficult to infer the phase of the received signal from the modulated data symbols. Different solutions for this problem have been used in second and third generation wireless systems. These include non-coherent detection, differential detection, pilot signal and pilot symbol assisted schemes. While each scheme provides a mechanism for either not requiring knowledge of the exact phase at the receiver or inferring it more accurately, there is an associated loss in performance. For example, non-coherent and differential modulation result in an increase in the required signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) compared to coherent schemes; pilot signal based schemes lead to a loss in power available for the information bits; and pilot symbol based schemes lead to a loss in bandwidth and power available for information bits.
Of the above-mentioned solutions, Pilot Symbol Assisted Modulation (PSAM) has received much attention in recent years. PSAM will be part of the wideband CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) standard of the universal mobile telecommunications system (UMTS) being studied by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP). (3GPP is a standards body comprising the European Telecommunication Standards Institution (ETSI) and several other international standards bodies.)
The basic idea behind PSAM is to periodically insert symbols known to the receiver in the information bit stream. If the pilot symbols are inserted often enough, they can be used to estimate the channel fading conditions and therefore can be used to coherently (i.e., with knowledge of the phase rotation introduced by the channel) demodulate the information bits. Since pilot symbols are corrupted by noise, the estimates of the fading conditions are not exact and hence the available information is insufficient to determine the optimal receiver. If the statistics (probability density function, in particular) of the fading are known, then one can derive the optimal operations to be performed at the receiver for detecting the transmitted bit. The form of such a receiver is known in the art. Unfortunately, when nothing is known about the fading statistics, or fading distribution, (as is typically the case) then this form of the receiver no longer provides an optimal solution.
In a wireless receiver, demodulation of a received signal involves the generation of a log-likelihood ratio (LLR) for each received bit. This is performed in accordance with a scale factor, which is determined as a function of a ratio of energy components of the transmitted signal.
In an embodiment of the invention, a UMTS receiver uses PSAM in demodulating a received BPSK signal. The UMTS receiver uses a single column look-up table (excluding index) to provide a scale factor for use in demodulation of the received signal. In particular, a ratio of the transmitted energy per pilot symbol to the transmitted energy per data symbol provides an index into the look-up table to return a value for the scale factor, which provides better performance during periods when the fading distribution is unknown.
Before continuing, the following definitions are made:
In addition, the following ratios are defined:
Finally,
As noted above, when the fading distribution is unknown, then an optimal procedure for bit detection does not exist. In this case, and in accordance with the invention, a sub-optimal receiver can be derived applying a known statistical technique called the Generalized Likelihood Ratio Test (GLRT). In accordance with the invention, the log-likelihood ratio (LLR) is then written as:
With unknown fading statistics, and in accordance with the invention, the following scaling factor is defined for each i multipath:
Thus, equation (3) becomes:
In an uncoded system, the LLR is simply compared to 0 to determine if the bit is +1 or −1. In a system that employs either convolutional or Turbo decoding, Λ(r, {circumflex over (p)}) is passed to the decoder. As noted above, the magnitude of Λ(r, {circumflex over (p)}) represents the confidence the receiver has in detecting that bit and the sign of Λ(r, {circumflex over (p)}) indicates whether the hypothesis that the bit is +1 is more likely or if −1 is more likely (after observing the channel output). In systems (such as UMTS) where the scaling factor could differ for bits within an encoded block, ignoring the scaling would result in improper representation of the relative confidence that the receiver has in the bits. Consequently, the performance, and observed bit error rate, of Turbo decoders and soft decision convolutional decoders would be degraded. In accordance with the invention, the correct scaling factor is determined as a function of system parameters. For a UMTS-based system, β is illustratively determined based on control channel information in accordance with equation (1), and σN
For example, consider the uplink of a UMTS based system as an illustration. On the uplink, the base station receiver (e.g., receiver 200 of
σN
where NCD is the spreading factor associated with the data symbols and K is a system gain, both known parameters.
The noise variance in the filtered pilot symbols, σZ
σZ
where NCP is the spreading factor associated with the pilot symbols (a known parameter) and g is a noise suppression factor associated with the filtering/averaging operation performed on the pilot symbols. For instance, if the filtered pilot symbols are produced by simply calculating the average of NP consecutive pilot symbols, then
Note that equations (6) and (7) imply that the noise variance in data and filtered pilot symbols is independent of the multipath index i. As a consequence,
so that the weighting factor, wi, can be written as:
which is also independent of the multipath index, i, and the number of multipaths, L. For a given G (which depends on known system parameters and the data and pilot symbol rates, the latter via NCD and NCP, respectively), there is, and in accordance with the invention, a common weight factor for all multipaths, which is a function of the energy ratio, β, above. (This may be contrasted with the weighting factors one comes across in literature, which are typically based on the assumption that the fading distribution is known. These weighting factors additionally require the knowledge of the number of multipaths being received and the relative strength of each multipath.)
A portion of a wireless receiver 200 (hereafter referred to as receiver 200) in accordance with the principles of the invention is shown in
Wireless signal 116 is received by demultiplexer 205. As noted above, wireless signal 116 represents the transmitted PSAM signal 111 as affected by fading, interference and noise (if any). Demultiplexer 205 demultiplexes the received wireless signal 116 to provide a data signal 206 (representing a sequence of data symbols) and a control signal 207-1 (which comprises a sequence of pilot symbols and other information, such as the above-mentioned β). The data signal 206 is applied to delay element 210, which delays the data signal as known in the art to provide a sequence of data symbols 216, comprising inphase and quadrature components as represented by (rI, rQ). Similarly, control signal 207-1 is applied to channel estimation element 215. The latter processes the control signal to provide an appropriate delay to the pilot portion of control signal 207 (pI, pQ) (not shown), which are further processed by channel estimation element 215 through suitable filtering/averaging techniques to produce a sequence of channel estimates ({circumflex over (P)}I, {circumflex over (P)}Q) represented by signal 217. In addition, channel estimation element 215 uses other control information to provide a signal(s) 218-1 representing values for the following parameters: G and σN2, to controller 225. Control signal 207-1 (along with the control signals from the other fingers) is also applied to control signal detector 295, which combines all fingers to provide one value of β to controller 225, via signal 296. (Often, channel estimation element 215 and control signal detector 295 comprise a stored-program based processor for performing the above-mentioned computations.) In accordance with the invention, demodulation of the received signal is performed as a function of the scale factor as represented by equation (9). In particular, controller 225, in accordance with equation (9), determines the scale factor, the value of which is provided to coherent demodulator 220 via signal 226-1. Coherent demodulator 220 provides the LLR (Λ(r, {circumflex over (p)})) as a function of the scale factor (in accordance with equation (5)), via signal 221-1, for use by turbo/conventional decoder 230, which provides decoded information bit stream 231. (Alternatively, equation (4) could be used, wherein channel estimation element 215 and control signal detector 295 use other control information to provide a signal(s) 218-1 and 296 representing values for the following parameters: β, G and σN2, to controller 225.) As can be observed from
When the scale factors are independent of the multipath index as embodied in equation (9), an alternative look-up table implementation may be used, where a priori values are determined (e.g., as described earlier)) for σN2, and G in order to determine w from equation (9) in advance. Such an illustrative look-up table is shown in
Another embodiment of the inventive concept is shown in
It should be observed, that in either receiver approach described above, there is no need to compute or estimate the number and relative strengths of the multipaths, nor does the fading distribution need to be known. β is identical for all multipaths.
The foregoing merely illustrates the principles of the invention and it will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise numerous alternative arrangements which, although not explicitly described herein, embody the principles of the invention and are within its spirit and scope. For example, although described in the context of optimum demodulation of PSAM signals, the inventive concept is applicable to other pilot signal based schemes (such as, but not limited to, the one used in the North America CDMA 2000 standard). Indeed, the inventive concept is not restricted to CDMA. Further, although shown as a separate elements, any or all of the elements of
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